Stephanie Nelson Uses the Power of Coupon Mom to Drive Donations Through Grocery Savings

By: Adam West

The Crunch: What started as a way to feed her family on a single income turned into a charitable initiative to supply food pantries and, eventually, became a successful business for Coupon Mom Stephanie Nelson. Many shoppers are aware of the savings available using coupons for groceries, but they are intimidated by the effort they think shopping with coupons takes. Coupon Mom aggregates available coupons with local ads for grocery and drugstore chains and provides free, well-organized information and educational how-to videos on the savings available. Stephanie’s Cut Out Hunger initiative lives on, encouraging shoppers to use coupons to purchase items that are ideal for charitable donations to pantries and other causes.

Stephanie Nelson invited four women to participate in the Coupon Mom Olympics at an Atlanta-area Kroger store. The founder of Coupon Mom gave each shopper $50, and the winner would be whoever ended up with the most value in groceries, with all of the purchases going to charity.

The Coupon Mom Olympics resulted in a very happy winner and more than 1,200 items donated to charity.

“The grocery store donated really high-value gift cards so we actually got a lot of interest in this,” Stephanie said. “I had four extremely competitive grocery shoppers on that day, and we raised, literally, a few thousand dollars worth of groceries for the $200 I put out.”

The winner was a 22-year-old single mother, who worked third shift at a chicken plant in Georgia. In second place was a full-time accountant with an MBA. After the event, Stephanie asked the winner, who bought $800 worth of groceries with $50, where she learned to be such a savvy shopper.

The young mother, who walked away with a much-needed Kroger gift card, told her that she watched online videos about saving with coupons. She also told Stephanie, “You learn how to save money when you really have to. I really have to.”

We recently spoke with Stephanie, whose website provides valuable free information on how shoppers can combine coupons with grocery store ads for big savings. Her Coupon Mom website has experienced explosive growth over the years, and Stephanie took some time to explain to us the company’s origins and how she’s planning to use her new resources to continue her charitable mission.

How-To Videos That Can Help People Save Up to 75% on Groceries

Stephanie began her coupon site 15 years ago and has experienced the success that comes with good timing, hard work, and lots of luck.

Stephanie Nelson, the founder of Coupon Mom, aims to educate people on how easy it is to save big with grocery coupons.

She’s recently added a marketing director, two managers, and a group of college-aged interns to her existing team of work-from-home moms, who do all of the data entry for the site. They moved into a larger office, and Stephanie now has the resources in place to start working on new ideas.

Early on in her couponing career, Stephanie identified a key hurdle: Some people just don’t know how to use coupons. Many people think saving money with coupons is complicated and takes too much effort.

“I realized the reason that people aren’t doing this strategic shopping is not because they don’t need to,” Stephanie said. “It’s because they don’t understand how easy it is. So my business is about making it easy for people to continue to get the products they like at a much lower price.”

The goal of Coupon Mom, which is a free service, is to aggregate the available coupon and store savings information and make it easy for people to cut their grocery bills in half. Now, Stephanie is taking it to the next level by shifting her team’s focus to a series of easily understandable how-to videos aimed at showing people, especially single mothers or those living on food stamps, how to get the most bang for their buck by using coupons.

“We’re developing much more comprehensive tutorial programs that we’re making available for free,” Stephanie said.

A Coupon Mom intern recently saved so much at an Atlanta-area Walmart, the cashier owed her 53 cents at the end of the transaction.

Another undertaking for Stephanie has been developing a blog that highlights some of the great deals available by sending her interns out to test the deals and illustrating just what can be accomplished with the right coupons and information. Recently, a trip to an Atlanta-area Walmart for $21 worth of products resulted in the cashier owing an intern 53 cents.

“That does happen,” Stephanie said. “And it is Walmart’s policy that they would pay you if the coupons were more than what it costs. Usually, you just throw a pack of gum in to break even so the poor cashier doesn’t have a nervous breakdown.”

Shoppers who are using Stephanie’s system for free or heavily discounted groceries can take some of those items and pay it forward with charitable donations, which are really the roots of her business.

A Charitable Mission That Aims to Cut Out Hunger

Before the Coupon Mom received her moniker from her segments on “Good Morning America,” her website was called CutOutHunger.com, which is still what she calls her initiative of using coupons to supply food pantries.

In 1995, Stephanie had worked 10 years in sales and marketing for Procter & Gamble and Marriott Hotels, when she decided to transition to being a full-time stay-at-home mother.

“I’ve done the math, and if every household donated one item a week to charity, every food pantry in our country would be flooded.”

“I managed my personal budget, but I managed it like a business budget because I viewed it as a job,” Stephanie said. “If our family could live on one income, then I could keep the job I wanted at the time, which was to stay at home with my kids.”

Already an avid user of coupons, her smart spending helped stretch her husband’s salary enough to support their family. Then she discovered that a local food pantry in the Atlanta area had a shortage, and she started organizing to make a difference in her community.

“I was getting free groceries every single week at the grocery store with coupons, and 99% of coupons are thrown away,” Stephanie said. “So it just seemed ridiculous to me that we didn’t try to somehow connect the dots.”

Stephanie began organizing all of the information and publishing it on the Cut Out Hunger site to make it easy for other people to save significantly on groceries.

Stephanie started the Cut Out Hunger Program as a way of keeping shelves stocked at food pantries.

“The concept was cut your grocery bill in half and feed the hungry,” Stephanie said. “If this service helped someone save, then I asked that they consider donating one item a week to charity. I’ve done the math, and if every household donated one item a week to charity, every food pantry in our country would be flooded. The supply would be able to keep up with the demand.”

One project she worked on was getting store managers in Atlanta to place special tags on shelves near products that would be ideal for charitable donations and placing a bin near the front of the store to collect donated items. She even taught children at elementary schools to look for the tags so they could remind their parents to donate.

Stephanie was making a difference in the Atlanta area. Then a series of television appearances gave her the opportunity to spread her message of coupon savings to a national audience.

As Seen On TV: Media Spotlight Added to Coupon Mom’s Success

A combination of media appearances and timing did a lot for Stephanie’s career as Coupon Mom.

Over the course of three years (2004-06), Stephanie was featured in 17 segments on “Good Morning America.” In 2008, a major recession hit the U.S., and saving money was on everybody’s minds, including television producers.

At one point, she was doing up to three appearances a day on national TV programs. She was even featured on The Oprah Winfrey Show. All of this attention helped her triple her business.

“The day after I went on Oprah, my website went to the top of Google for the search term ‘coupons,’ ” Stephanie said. “We were in the No. 1 or No. 2 position for six years. People asked me, ‘Who does your SEO?’ I told them, honestly, Oprah. We didn’t do any SEO, we just did our business.”

Then in 2010, TLC launched a reality TV series called, “Extreme Couponing,” that drew a lot of attention to the concept of saving money on groceries with coupons.

“From my perspective, it was the best thing that ever happened to our website, and I wasn’t even in the show,” Stephanie said.

Stephanie put her success to good use. As her company grew, she was able to enlist a bigger staff and take her site national. A bigger employee base also gave Stephanie more resources to start working toward bigger projects such as her charitable outreach and tutorial videos.

Putting Coupons to Work Leads to Significant Savings and Donations

Like the single mother who won the Coupon Mom shopping competition, Stephanie said the biggest users of coupons are often the shoppers who most need to stretch their grocery dollars.

“When I first started doing this, people told me I was crazy. ‘No one is ever going to want to do this. This is too hard.’ And I said, ‘No, we’re going to try to make it easy.’ “

Over the years, the Coupon Mom has received emails from people using her site to learn how to feed their families, despite financial hardships like sudden unemployment. 10% of her members are on food stamps and learning new ways to stretch their resources. Stephanie plans to concentrate a lot of her new resources on educational how-to videos that can truly improve people’s lives.

“That really hits me when people who really need to save money use my service, and it’s helping them,” Stephanie said. “I can’t even tell you how good it feels.”

Everyone buys groceries, and with websites like Coupon Mom, paying full price can be a thing of the past. And it works for everyone. Customers with limited resources can cut their grocery bills in half and free up money for other essential needs, and higher-income shoppers can also save money and use coupons to contribute to charitable causes.

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Adam West spent more than a dozen years working in print journalism and now contributes as a writer and editor for DealCrunch, among other sites. Driven by his interests in marketing, e-commerce, and online savings, Adam helps educate readers on all things retail.

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